New York Jets NFL Draft picks 2024: Grades, fits and scouting reports


The New York Jets entered the 2024 NFL Draft on April 25 with seven picks over the three-day draft, but now have eight following trades.

The Jets traded down one spot to No. 11, and selected Penn State offensive tackle Olu Fashanu. The Jets also sent pick No. 203 to the Vikings in exchange for 129 and 157. On Friday, they traded up with the Carolina Panthers to take Western Kentucky wide receiver Malachi Corley with the 65th pick. The Jets sent the Panthers Nos. 72 and 157 to move up.

They started Saturday with a trade as well, sending No. 111 in the fourth round to the Green Bay Packers for Nos. 126 and 190. They eventually traded 126 to the Detroit Lions for a third-round pick in 2025, then moved No. 129 to the San Francisco 49ers for two fifth-round picks.

Wisconsin running back Braelon Allen became the pick at No. 134.

Keep coming back here throughout the draft for analysis of each Jets pick.

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NFL Draft 2024 ‘The Beast’ Guide: Dane Brugler’s scouting reports and player rankings

Round 1

No. 11 (via Vikings): Olu Fashanu, OT, Penn State

How he fits

In the debate between need and want, the Jets went with need. With a pair of thirtysomething free agents at the tackle spots, the Jets opted to lay a foundation for the future with Fashanu. He likely will get thrown in as a rookie, and could become an anchor for the next decade. As tempting as drafting tight end Brock Bowers was, the Jets made the right move. Fashanu is a left tackle, and that’s important for the Jets’ future. — Scott Dochterman

Dane Brugler’s analysis

“As a pass blocker, Fashanu moves with athletic body control and is technically diverse with his ambidextrous hands to mix up his timing and sit down versus pass rushers (finished his career with zero sacks allowed on 733 pass-blocking snaps over 29 games). Though he flashes power and mobility in the run game, he tends to get overextended and struggles to sustain the point of attack (shows much better balance in reverse rather than moving forward).

“Overall, Fashanu is a work in progress as a run blocker but above average in pass protection, because of his body quickness, anchor versus power and attention to detail. He projects as a long-term starting left tackle in the NFL with Pro Bowl upside.”

Zack Rosenblatt’s analysis

New York Jets draft Olu Fashanu: How he fits, pick grade and scouting intel

Jets’ Olu Fashanu pick adds depth to offensive line — and that’s important

Scott Dochterman’s grade: A

Round 1 grades for all 32 picks

Round 2

No picks

Round 3

No. 65 (via Panthers): Malachi Corley, WR, Western Kentucky

How he fits

The Jets moved up seven spots to pick up one of the most productive receivers in college football the last three years. Corley (5-10 1/2, 207 pounds) totaled 253 catches for 2,968 yards and 29 TDs over his last three seasons. In 2022, he led college football in yards after the catch and missed tackles forced by a receiver. Known as “the YAC King,” Corley averaged 9.2 yards after the catch in his last two years combined. He’s physical, tough and made to play the slot in the NFL. Expect him to make some tough catches for Aaron Rodgers. — Scott Dochterman

Dane Brugler’s analysis

“Corley needs to be more controlled in his breaks and tempo to consistently separate as a route runner, but he is dynamic with the ball in his hands. He has the speed, physicality and contact balance ideal for a slot role that uses motions, jet sweeps and quick screens. His NFL comparison is somewhere between Deebo Samuel and Amari Rodgers — which is a wide spectrum.

Zack Rosenblatt’s analysis

Why the Jets wanted ‘YAC King’ Malachi Corley no matter what in NFL Draft

Scott Dochterman’s grade: A

Grades for every pick in Rounds 2 and 3

 

Round 4

No. 134 (via Ravens): Braelon Allen, RB, Wisconsin

How he fits

Like Israel Abanikanda (still in the mix, by the way), Allen is young. Youngest prospect in this class (20). Decent pass-catcher (28 catches in 2023). Lauded for his maturity. Averaged 5.9 yards per carry in his career. Dane Brugler also wrote that he’s “one of the better pass-blocking backs in this class.” — Zack Rosenblatt

Jake Ciely’s fantasy analysis

Great speed, size and balance with limited lateral movement and enjoys contact too much. Best case is he’s a slightly lesser Derrick Henry, but he’ll be more of a Latavius Murray behind Breece Hall with top-20 upside if Hall got hurt.

Dane Brugler’s analysis

Allen was No. 97 in Brugler’s Top 300 big board. What he had to say about him:

“A balanced, one-cut athlete, Allen shows a great feel for lane development, especially on inside/outside zone. He can run with either finesse or physicality, depending on the situation (69.5 percent of his yardage came after contact in 2023). He needs to prove his reliability (ball security, durability), but he plays through pain, and NFL teams love that he is the youngest player in this draft class.

“Overall, Allen isn’t overly creative and doesn’t run with as much nastiness as his size suggests, but he is well built with the vision, feet and overall feel to maximize the run design. He has the talent and third-down potential to be a productive NFL tandem back, similar to Tyler Allgeier.”

Round 5

No. 173 (via 49ers)
No. 176 (via 49ers)

Round 6

No. 185
No. 190 (via Packers)

Round 7

No. 257 (compensatory)

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(Photo of Braelon Allen: John Fisher / Getty Images)





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